Laboratory of Comparative Ethology, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, P.O. Box 529, 20837, Poolesville, Maryland, MD, USA,
Anim Cogn. 1998 Oct;1(2):101-6. doi: 10.1007/s100710050014. Epub 2014 Jan 5.
This research examined token-mediated tool-use in a tufted capuchin monkey (Cebus apella). We conducted five experiments. In experiment 1 we examined the use of plastic color-coded chips to request food, and in experiments 2-5 we examined the use of color-coded chips to request tools. Our subject learned to use chips to request tools following the same general pattern seen in great apes performing analogous tasks, that is, initial discrimination followed by an understanding of the relationship among tokens, tools, and their functions. Our findings are consistent with the view that parallel representational processes underlie the tool-related behavior of capuchins and great apes.
本研究考察了卷尾猴(Cebus apella)中的代币介导工具使用。我们进行了五项实验。在实验 1 中,我们考察了使用塑料彩色筹码来请求食物的情况,在实验 2-5 中,我们考察了使用彩色筹码来请求工具的情况。我们的研究对象学会了按照与执行类似任务的大型猿类相同的一般模式使用筹码来请求工具,即最初的辨别,然后是对代币、工具及其功能之间关系的理解。我们的发现与以下观点一致,即类似的代表性过程是卷尾猴和大型猿类的工具相关行为的基础。